Sarah, Countess of Ripon

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

engraved by W. J. Edwards from an original portrait by Thomas Lawrence[1]
Born
Sarah Albinia Louisa Hobart

22 February 1793 (1793-02-22)
Died9 April 1867 (1867-04-10) (aged 74)
, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom
Resting placeAll Saints Churchyard, Nocton
NationalityEnglish
Known forWife of the Prime Minister 1827–28
Spouse
(m. 1814; died 1859)
Children3, including George Robinson, 1st Marquess of Ripon
Parents
Viscount Goderich, painted by Thomas Lawrence c. 1824

Sarah Albinia Louisa Robinson, Countess of Ripon (née Hobart; 22 February 1793 – 9 April 1867) was the wife of F. J. Robinson, 1st Viscount Goderich, who was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom between 1827 and 1828. (During his term in office, she was known as the Viscountess Goderich (pronounced /ˈɡdrɪ/ GOH-dritch[2]); she became Countess of Ripon when he was made Earl of Ripon in 1833.)

Early life

She was born in England, the daughter of Robert Hobart (later the 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire) and his wife Margaretta (née Bourke).[3]

Married life

On 1 September 1814, she married Frederick J. Robinson, who was then MP for Ripon and held the position of Paymaster of the Forces in the cabinet of Lord Liverpool (Prime Minister 1812–27). On 22 May 1815 she gave birth to their first child, Eleanor Henrietta Victoria Robinson. Sarah's father died on 4 February 1816 and she and Frederick inherited all of his property. She gave birth to a son, Hobart Frederick Robinson, on 8 September 1816, but he died shortly after.

In 1818, Robinson became President of the Board of Trade, and then in 1823 became Chancellor of the Exchequer.[4]

Lady Robinson's daughter Eleanor died on 31 October 1826.

viscountess
.

Prime Minister's wife

Viscount Goderich became

post-natal depression after her second son's birth.[6]

Viscountess Goderich was the subject of much criticism and gossip during her husband's premiership. In December 1827 William Huskisson wrote:

Poor Goderich is quite unnerved, and in a most pitiful state. Much of this misfortune is perhaps the natural effect of his character, but it is, in the present instance, greatly aggravated by the constant worry in which he has been kept by his all but crazy wife, and by the entire ascendancy which his good nature (not to say his weakness) has allowed her to assume.[7]

American diplomat Christopher Hughes called her, "a tormenting, worrying & very pretty woman; & has always ruled the Roost in her household & bullies his Lordship into her will & way; I know her as Lady Sarah Robinson;" & though she is a very nice woman, she is capricious & Sovereigns over her Lord."[8]

Lady Goderich was also described as being "demanding,

hypochondrial." There exist letters written by Sarah's step aunt, the writer Emily Eden
, which frequently describes her niece's strange behaviour. In 1826 she said:

I will not say anything about Sarah; she is too bad if she knows what she is about. Poor Mr. Robinson (Frederick) was summoned back from Wrest Park yesterday, where he had been amusing himself for three days. She sent him word she was dying, and when he arrived in the greatest haste yesterday, she was gone out airing. He was very cross, but too late.[9]

The aunt also felt that Frederick had a "nervous disposition" and was completely dominated by the hysterical behaviour of his wife. It is these character traits that may have made him such an unsuitable Prime Minister even though he was a competent politician in lower offices. After he resigned as Prime Minister in January 1828, one of his colleagues remarked that he was "quite another man who sleeps at nights now, and laughs and talks as usual".[10]

After Downing Street

The couple lived at

countess
.

Nocton Hall burned down in 1834 and was rebuilt.[11]

Lady Sarah arranged that all the local children could attend school for a penny a week, paying the difference herself.[12]

Lord Ripon died in 1859 and their son became the 2nd Earl of Ripon.[12] She had a close relationship with her son, being described as "his only intellectual and religious guide until late adolescence."[13] In 1862, Countess had the church of All Saints in Nocton Hall torn down and rebuilt in memory of her husband, to a design by George Gilbert Scott.[14]

The Countess of Ripon died in 1867, aged 74.[13]

References

  1. ^ "Lady Sarah Hobart, Countess of Ripon - after Sir Thomas Lawrence - c1840 | #307658031". Worthpoint.
  2. ^ Jones, D., p. 207
  3. ^ "Frederick Robinson, Viscount Goderich (1782-1859)". www.historyhome.co.uk.
  4. ^ "Frederick John Robinson - History of government". history.blog.gov.uk. 12 November 2015.
  5. ^ Lodge, E. (1838:414). “The” peerage of the British empire. United Kingdom: Saunders.
  6. ^ Theakston, K. (2010:56). After Number 10: Former Prime Ministers in British Politics. United Kingdom: Palgrave Macmillan UK.
  7. ^ Aspinall, A. "The Coalition Ministries of 1827 (Continued)", The English Historical Review, Vol. 42, No. 168 (October 1927), pp. 533–559
  8. ^ Secretary of State, 1825-1829. (1981:1391). United States: University Press of Kentucky.
  9. ^ Dickenson, Violet, ed. (1919). Miss Eden's Letters. London: Macmillan.
  10. . (subscription required)
  11. ^ "Nocton". www.slha.org.uk.
  12. ^ a b Hall, Geoff (24 January 2007). "Nocton in Lincolnshire: Nocton Hall - 'Prosperity' Robinson".
  13. ^ a b "The Marquess of Ripon". www.truth521.org.uk.
  14. ^ Hall, Geoff (24 January 2007). "Nocton in Lincolnshire: Nocton Hall - Lady Ripon and Church of All Saints".